“…I situate my discussion in this paper within two broad areas of scholarship on dialogicality and dialogical pedagogy: 1) sociocultural psychology, specifically research that explores the dialogical processes through which the person may reinvent herself and contribute to collective change, together with the conditions that support or inhibit these processes (Skinner et al, 2001;Zittoun, 2014); and 2) scholars who explore dialogic pedagogy as a means for promoting student and teacher agency, democratic participation, and broad educational and social change (Freire, 2005;Matusov, Smith, Soslau, Marjanovic-Shane, & von Duyke, 2016;Segal, Pollak, & Lefstein, 2017). I am interested in the potential of dialogicality for opening spaces for self-authorship, in which the person may reinvent herself and re-envision herself as a powerful individual who is capable of transforming her social reality in collaboration with others, what Freire calls "dialogic action" (Freire, 2000(Freire, /1970).…”